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Author Perron, Paul.

Title Narratology and text : subjectivity and identity in New France and Québécois literature / Paul Perron.

Publication Info. Toronto, Ont. : University of Toronto Press, [2003]
©2003

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (xvii, 338 pages).
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Series Toronto studies in semiotics and communication
Toronto studies in semiotics and communication.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 317-328) and index.
Contents Part 1. Narratology. Introduction to narratology ; A.J. Greimas and narratology -- pt. 2. Discovery, conversion, and colonization. First encounters and myth making : Jacques Cartier's Voyages to New France ; Settlement and conversion : Jean de Brebeuf's Jesuit relations of 1635 and 1636 ; Founding nations : Jesuit-Huron relations in seventeenth-century New France ; Narrating and reading the body : the martyrdom of Isaac Jogues -- pt. 3. Historiography and the novel : nation and identity. Before and after the fall : the historical novel : Les anciens canadiens (The Canadians of old) ; Family, group, and nation in the nineteenth-century agrarian novel : La terre paternelle (The paternal farm) ; Nationalism and the novel of colonialization : Maria Chapdelaine ; On the margins of nation : the realist novel : La Scouine ; History and the urban novel : Bonheur d'occasion (The tin flute) ; Utopia, family, and nation : the wilderness novel : Agaguk.
Summary In Narratology and Text, Paul Perron examines the role that literature plays in the formation of French Canadian identity. Perron presents a narratological and semiotic analysis of canonical non-fictional and fictional texts from New France and Quebec, and illustrates how citizens of French Catholic origins living in Canada have constructed their identity by defining the self as part of a closed community founded in race, language, and religion, and as radically opposed to the other, constituted as an omnipresent heterogeneous threat to the homogenous group. The first section of Perron's study is devoted to an historico-notional overview of some of the major contributors to the theory of narrative, especially that of A.J. Greimas. The second and third parts initially examine the primary and founding texts of first encounters, Jacques Cartier's Voyages of 1534 and 1535, and the Jesuit Relations, and then turn to discussions of six representative Québécois novels from the mid-nineteenth century to the end of the Duplessis era. Each work is examined in terms of its definitions of the self, the other, the group, the nation, language, race, and religion, as well as its treatment of the idea of place - the utopian here as opposed to a dystopian there or elsewhere. Fusing semiotics, narratology, stylistics, and literary and cultural theory with one of the only English-language studies on Greimas, this important work offers an original and thought-provoking contribution to studies of literature and semiotics.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Nationalism in literature.
Nationalism in literature.
French-Canadian fiction -- Québec (Province) -- History and criticism.
French-Canadian fiction.
Canadian fiction (French) -- Québec (Province) -- History and criticism.
Chronological Term To 1763
Genre/Form Electronic books.
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
History.
Sources.
Other Form: Print version: Perron, Paul. Narratology and text. Toronto, Ont. : University of Toronto Press, ©2003 9780802036889 (DLC) 2003273013 (OCoLC)50022894
ISBN 9781442677562 (electronic book)
1442677562 (electronic book)
1282022997
9781282022997
0802036880
9780802036889